|
Lefkadha is an oddity. Connected to the mainland by a long causeway through lagoons, it barely feels like an island, at least on the busier eastern side - and historically in fact it isn't. It is separated from the mainland by a canal cut by Corinthian colonists in the seventh century BC, which has been re-dredged (after silting up) on various occasions since, and today is spanned by a thirty-metre boat-drawbridge built in 1986. Lefkadha was long an important strategic base, and approaching the causeway you pass a series of fortresses, climaxing in the fourteenth-century castle of Santa Maura - the Venetian name for the island. These defences were too close to the mainland to avoid an Ottoman tenure, which began in 1479, but the Venetians wrested back control a couple of centuries later. They were in turn overthrown by Napoleon in 1797 and then the British took over as Ionian protectors in 1810. It wasn't until 1864 that Lefkadha, like the rest of the Ionian archipelago, was reunited with Greece. At first glance Lefkadha is not overwhelmingly attractive, although it is a substantial improvement on the mainland just opposite. The whiteness of its rock strata - lefkas has the same root as lefkos , "white" - is often brutally exposed by road cuts and quarries, and the highest ridge is bare except for ugly military and telecom installations. With the marshes and sumpy inlets on the east coast, mosquitoes can be a midsummer problem. On the other hand, the island is a fertile place, supporting cypresses, olive groves and vineyards, particularly on the western slopes, and life in the mountain villages remains relatively untouched, with the older women still wearing traditional local dress - two skirts (one forming a bustle), a dark headscarf and a rigid bodice. Lefkadha has been the home of various literati, including two prominent Greek poets, Angelos Sikelianos and Aristotelis Valaoritis, and the British writer Lafcadio Hearn. Support for the arts continues in the form of a well-attended international festival of theatre and folk-dancing, now extended throughout the summer, with most events staged in the Santa Maura castle. On a smaller scale, frequent village celebrations accompanied by bouzouki and clarinet ensure that the strong local wine flows well into the early hours. Lefkadha remains relatively undeveloped, with just two major resorts: Vassiliki , in its vast bay in the south, claims to be Europe's biggest windsurf centre; Nydhri , on the east coast, overlooks the island's picturesque archipelago, and is the launching point for the barely inhabited island of Meganissi .
Your Tip for Lefkadha (Lefkas)
Help other backpackers! Write your own guides and backpacking tips to Lefkadha (Lefkas) - they will appear instantly on this page - Please only write a tip/guide to Lefkadha (Lefkas) - visit the main Lefkadha (Lefkas) forum to ask a question!
Please do not post links to your site here (they won't work) - please use the Lefkadha (Lefkas) webguide section below! Thanks.
|